Now to only bring that rule to the US. I'm glad at least somewhere they're listening to those who are/were screwed by scalpers. One per customer seems fair so more people can at least have a chance at owning one.

Watch, now the scalpers will troll to the death to get people against this so they can sell at a higher price.

I stopped reading after that line. Outside sports titles, ALL games need some sort of story, otherwise the game is just mindless wandering for no apparent reason. Even multiplayer shooter based games have some reason why you're battling the other team; sport, or mission, or something else. I get some of the players just want to jump in and shoot each other, but without a reason why, what's the point...

"If you want to think of all DLC as content that was stripped from the main game, fine, but clearly that isn't the case every time."

It is the case when every time they announce Season Pass and/or Expansions before initial release. When a non-mmo game is already told there's expansions for it, there's the proof already the game is getting some of its content cut just to have those extra sales later. There's also the mo...

Gaming went stagnant when companies started thinking with their pockets first. I hate how some of the fans actually argue in favor of DLC, expansions, and Season Passes for various reasons, instead of arguing in complete experiences. I'm glad the whole Season Pass phase is starting to die down, at the same time I'm concerned about the next thing coming out that will rip off customers even more.

As far as the whole reboot/remaster debate, I see it as an opportunity ...

I'll give an easy answer. Games back then were complete, fun experiences that didn't rely on DLC, or online multiplayer. Certain games I can play for hours on end and not get bored; for today's games I can't say the same unfortunately. A few experiences I can play for extended time frames but not as many as the older games.

Another reason? Pop in a game, done. Not wait for a patch, or hope the online community is still there, or even hope the online is ...

I read the article, and it actually praises this years E3 as being more diverse in gaming than the past. All the other comments regarding SJW and other nonsense is trolling, and should be treated as such. Don't believe me? Read the article. The title is clickbait, but the article itself isn't.

I do agree with the author, the diversity in gaming this year at E3 was much more welcome than the typical cut/paste copycat games we had in the past. Now, as far as whic...

The bit involving a Children's Hospital, the Hospital has channels to get what they need within a reasonable parameter. But I do get what the author is trying to say at the same time. I'd rather limit what a customer can buy to make it fair for those who actually want one over buying a whole bunch just to resell them at a higher price.

What gets me the most, it's always Nintendo consoles that end up being short supplied every time. When the PS2 first launch...

Situations like this is why I can't stand the human race sometimes. "Supply and demand!" and the other favorite "If I can get one, you can to. No excuse." Just the fact of selling a pre-order for $200+ means retailers better put a limit per customer, and/or Nintendo allowing people to also pre-order from them to have a base idea of how many to ship out initially. I'd also suggest pre-ordering at full price instead of just partial payment, to help those who actu...

Sega currently offers more options to play classic games, and people still find something to complain about? You have the original games, the mini version coming soon with the ROMs AND cartridge support, plus mobile; and yet there's those few out there who will still find something to nit pick?

Just because the software released isn't 100% doesn't mean "that's it," just means there's room for improvement, and updates.

After the whole fiasco with the NES Mini, I'm not going to waste my time until there's a surplus of consoles available. Everyone knows the scalpers will be the first to buy it, and resell it starting at $100+ and higher depending on demand. Honestly the Sega one is far more appealing because I can at least play cartridges on it, while this one doesn't look like it can read them at all.

I do want to at least give this one a chance since it does have about 90% ...

-Make quality of games like there was back in the 90s and early 2000s -Couch co-op is a good idea, despite what trolls debate -Stop with the DLC and Season Passes prior to initial release -If a non-gamer argues/debates against gaming, ask questions to figure why they hate gaming, and remind them respectable adults respect other peoples hobbies -Have actual, real gamers mak...